SmashWiki:Manual of Style

This page is a SmashWiki guideline, a principle that suggests how users should contribute and conduct themselves. When editing this page, please ensure that your revision reflects consensus. If in doubt, consider discussing changes on the talk page.

The SmashWiki Manual of Style is a style guide that aims to make the wiki easy to read, write, and understand.

Example: Tech instead of Ukemi, as while the latter is an official term, players universally use the former.

Example: Glancing blow instead of phantom hit, as while some players use the latter, the former is a widely-recognized official term.

General character articles (those that focus on a character as they are outside of the Smash Bros. series) should be named according to how the character is most commonly known in their originating series. On the other hand, articles about playable characters' appearances in the Smash series should be named according to how the game names them.

Example: Fox McCloud instead of Fox

Example: Fox (SSBB) instead of Fox McCloud (SSBB).

Exception: Should a character be announced and have the same in-game name as another character (and not be an alternate costume), their fighter article can be named something else.

For tournaments, an article on the tournament series overall should end with (series). For example, an article on the tournament series "The Big House" belongs on Tournament:The Big House (series), while the article on the first tournament in the series, also called "The Big House," belongs on Tournament:The Big House.

Disambiguation pages should be ordered in terms of relevancy (such as playable characters being prioritized over other entities with similar-sounding names/handles. An example: Cloud Strife being prioritized over Cloud9).

Style of writing should be semiformal, with no silly remarks or slang.

Initials and abbreviations should not be used instead of the proper name within articles. A shortened name can be acceptable, however, if the full name was already used in the article or section. For the original Super Smash Bros., SSB, SSB64, and Smash 64 are all acceptable shortened names. When referring to Super Smash for Wii U and Nintendo 3DS collectively, SSB4 and Smash 4 are acceptable abbreviations.

Example: "Meta Knight is the best character in Brawl" is proper, if the full title Super Smash Bros. Brawl was already used in the article.

Exception: Competitive terms that are commonly used and known by their initials, such as "DI" instead of "directional influence", can have their initials used in articles instead of the full name.

Language should be gender-neutral, unless referencing a specific character or person.

All Pokémon should be treated as gender-neutral.

Some fighters have no defined gender in their home series and change gender in some of their alternate costumes in Smash Bros. (such as Robin and Inkling). When discussing these characters in the context of their home series, it is acceptable to refer to them with gender-neutral language. When discussing these characters as Smash Bros. fighters, it is preferred to use the gender of the default costume. In either case, omitting pronouns entirely is a valid style as long as the text does not become unnecessarily clunky.

When referring to the individual Ice Climbers, always use Popo to refer to the player-controlled leader, and Nana for the computer-controlled partner. While some alternate costumes have Nana as the leader and Popo as the partner, Popo as the leader and Nana as the partner is the default configuration in-game, and in the competitive community, the leader is referred to as Popo with the partner being called Nana regardless of the costume. Additionally, "Popo" and "Nana" are easier to use and flow better in articles than "leader climber", "partner climber", and the like.

All writing should be done in third person.

Example: the player must instead of you must

Example: The glitch can be done by... instead of You can do the glitch by...

There is no preference whether to use American or non-American English; therefore, one should not make an edit to a page that consists of only changing such spelling/grammar. However, it is preferred to remain consistent within a section or article. Relatedly, articles on localized subjects, such as American tournaments or British players, should use the same regionalization as their subjects.

Exception: Double quotes must be used, as single quotes are used for formatting.

Exception: Technical syntax may require a specific form of "color" or "colour".

Likewise, when multiple acceptable variants of a word exist (regardless of region), there is no reason to change the word written on a page into another variant of it.

Example: The following are both spelled correctly: Samus', Samus's

As the Smash Bros. series was developed in Japan, all its underlying data is coded in metric units. Therefore, when referring to in-game measurements, always use metric first, followed by an imperial measurement if necessary.

Example: "Hit Sandbag 1000 m (3280 ft.) or more in Home-Run Contest."

Exception: If a trophy description is different between NTSC and PAL regions (and the measurement units are not the only difference), use only whatever units are appropriate.

Unnecessary hyphens should not be used; if a combination of two words is proper without use of a hyphen, or are proper without being connected, a hyphen should not be used.

Example: Use followup instead of follow-up.

Example: Use up tilt instead of up-tilt.

Example: Use bair instead of b-air.

Note: Some terms such as fair can be confusing to some readers when shortened like this. If in doubt, use a spelled-out version such as forward aerial.

In general, using emphasis should be avoided in articles. In cases where emphasis cannot be avoided, either bold text or italic text is acceptable, and should not be intermixed.

Generally, spacing does not matter to readers of an article (the software removes most extra spacing); however it can have a large impact on the readability of the code when one is trying to edit the page. The code should have enough spacing to make the coding clear while not taking up too much room.

Example: It does not matter whether one uses one space or two spaces between sentences, as both are reduced to one space.

Example: Leaving a blank space between an article and its categories makes it easier to recognize the two.

Exception: If there is not at least one blank line between two paragraphs, they will be treated as one single paragraph.

Exception: More than two consecutive blank lines may leave a proportionally-sized blank space on the page.

Exception: Complex tables and templates can be very picky at times when it comes to spaces and returns. Be mindful and always preview edits of such pages.

Generally, only link to an article once. If "damage" is mentioned five times on a page, it should only link to [[damage]] the first time. The exception is if the page is very long, in which case it can be linked again near the start of a later section. If helpful to readers, links may be repeated in infoboxes, tables, images, image captions, and footnotes.

Similarly to the above, linking to a redirect that is an abbreviation or a redirect that links to a section of another page is acceptable (and often preferred), unless an abbreviation isn't appropriate in the context.

Example: Using [[SSBB]] or [[Brawl]] is fine in most cases (often table headings and infoboxes), whereas [[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]] should be used the first time it's mentioned on the page, and [[Super Smash Bros. Brawl|Brawl]] is never necessary and should be avoided

The capitalization of the first letter of the link does not matter, but the capitalization of the other letters does. This means that single-word links can be written for whatever capitalization is needed in the sentence, while links of two words or more cannot.

Example: [[shield]] and [[Shield]] are equivalent

Example: [[shield grab]] and [[Shield grab]] are equivalent, but [[Shield Grab]] is not

When displaying an image, [[Image:]] and [[File:]] have the same function. Like American vs. non-American spellings, both are equally acceptable, and making an edit simply to change this is highly discouraged.

When placing links over text, it is recommended to only use 1 to 5 words for that link. A link should not use more than 10 words, except in very special circumstances. Turning entire sentences into links is also highly discouraged.